Overview

Mount Washington is one of the most popular and most easily accessed climbs in the Olympic Range. It sits with its 5944 ft neighbor Mt Ellinor high above the shores of Lake Cushman. Washington's summit ridge serves as the boundary for the Mount Skokomish Wilderness boundary.

The view from the summit of Mount Washington (Photo by Gimpilator)Full Size

Getting There

East Side Routes: From US 101, follow signs for Lake Cushman until FS rd 24 is reached. At the T, turn right on RD 24 for about 1 mile. Turn left on FS RD 2419 and follow it up the Big Creek Drainage to the start of the routes. In the winter, this road may be blocked 2-3 miles from the trailhead.

North/West Side Routes: From US 101, take FS RD 25 towards the Hama Hama Recreation Area. Just after the Hama Hama campground, cross the river and follow the signs for Elk Lakes. From the lakes, take FS RD 2401 to its end.

Most routes begin directly off the roads with minimal approach required (amount of bushwhacking varies...)

Red Tape

Mt Washington is within the Olympic National Forest, so there is no entrance or camping fee. A Northwest Forest Pass is not needed unless parking at the Mt Ellinor trailhead.

Camping

Camping is allowed anywhere within the National Forest. The Hama Hama, Elk Lake, and Jefferson Lake campgrounds all fill up fast with fishermen and hunters so don't count on getting a spot.

Routes

There are established routes up almost every climbable aspect of Mt Washington. These routes vary from low class 3 climbs to chossy 5th class technical climbs. If you plan to attempt any route, regardless of its rating, make sure you are well versed in basic mountaineering skills (ice ax use, etc...) and navigation.

See the Olympic Mountain Climbing Guide by Olympic Mountain Rescue for in depth details on this route. TR with excellent beta

East Ridge

II, 4

Northeast Ridge

I, 3

Use the Jefferson Creek approach. This route involves extensive bushwhacking and is rarely done

Northeast Face

II, 3

Ascends between the NE and N ridges

Great Groove

II, 4

Climb a dry waterfall on the NE Face before intersecting the NE face route

North Ridge - Diagonal Snowfield

II, 4

Same approach as the Great Groove

North Ridge - Yellow Cedar

II, 4

North-Northwest Face

II, 3

Shangri-La Valleye

II, 3

Sometimes Combined with a traverse over to Mt Ellinor

Southwest Snowfield

II, 3

*If you have any specific route info, feel free to let me know so it can be added to this page (or you could create a separate route page :) )

Low on the NE Ridge in bad weather

The upper basin on Route 1

When to Climb

Mount Washington is regularly climbed in all seasons. Winter eliminates much of the scree and poor quality rock, but snow can greatly increase the approach distance. Usually only the east side routes are climbed in the winter months. Route 1 and Winter Direct are favorites during the winter, often climbed on George Washington's birthday.

Additions and Corrections

-> With 2615' of clean prominence, the peak is the 73rd-most prominent point in the State of Washington.

I have re-attached the "Washington Counties - Greatest Prominent Point(s)" list page to this new Mount Washington page.

I recommend you notify the page owners of the Washington P2K list page, so they can update their links. Also, please re-attach their list page as a child to this new Mount Washington page. http://www.summitpost.org/washington-2000-ft-prominence-peaks/250418